[ aws . batch ]

submit-job

Description

Submits an Batch job from a job definition. Parameters that are specified during SubmitJob override parameters defined in the job definition. vCPU and memory requirements that are specified in the resourceRequirements objects in the job definition are the exception. They can’t be overridden this way using the memory and vcpus parameters. Rather, you must specify updates to job definition parameters in a resourceRequirements object that’s included in the containerOverrides parameter.

Note

Job queues with a scheduling policy are limited to 500 active fair share identifiers at a time.

Warning

Jobs that run on Fargate resources can’t be guaranteed to run for more than 14 days. This is because, after 14 days, Fargate resources might become unavailable and job might be terminated.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Synopsis

  submit-job
--job-name <value>
--job-queue <value>
[--share-identifier <value>]
[--scheduling-priority-override <value>]
[--array-properties <value>]
[--depends-on <value>]
--job-definition <value>
[--parameters <value>]
[--container-overrides <value>]
[--node-overrides <value>]
[--retry-strategy <value>]
[--propagate-tags | --no-propagate-tags]
[--timeout <value>]
[--tags <value>]
[--eks-properties-override <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
[--debug]
[--endpoint-url <value>]
[--no-verify-ssl]
[--no-paginate]
[--output <value>]
[--query <value>]
[--profile <value>]
[--region <value>]
[--version <value>]
[--color <value>]
[--no-sign-request]
[--ca-bundle <value>]
[--cli-read-timeout <value>]
[--cli-connect-timeout <value>]
[--cli-binary-format <value>]
[--no-cli-pager]
[--cli-auto-prompt]
[--no-cli-auto-prompt]

Options

--job-name (string)

The name of the job. It can be up to 128 letters long. The first character must be alphanumeric, can contain uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens (-), and underscores (_).

--job-queue (string)

The job queue where the job is submitted. You can specify either the name or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the queue.

--share-identifier (string)

The share identifier for the job. If the job queue doesn’t have a scheduling policy, then this parameter must not be specified. If the job queue has a scheduling policy, then this parameter must be specified.

--scheduling-priority-override (integer)

The scheduling priority for the job. This only affects jobs in job queues with a fair share policy. Jobs with a higher scheduling priority are scheduled before jobs with a lower scheduling priority. This overrides any scheduling priority in the job definition.

The minimum supported value is 0 and the maximum supported value is 9999.

--array-properties (structure)

The array properties for the submitted job, such as the size of the array. The array size can be between 2 and 10,000. If you specify array properties for a job, it becomes an array job. For more information, see Array Jobs in the Batch User Guide .

size -> (integer)

The size of the array job.

Shorthand Syntax:

size=integer

JSON Syntax:

{
  "size": integer
}

--depends-on (list)

A list of dependencies for the job. A job can depend upon a maximum of 20 jobs. You can specify a SEQUENTIAL type dependency without specifying a job ID for array jobs so that each child array job completes sequentially, starting at index 0. You can also specify an N_TO_N type dependency with a job ID for array jobs. In that case, each index child of this job must wait for the corresponding index child of each dependency to complete before it can begin.

(structure)

An object that represents an Batch job dependency.

jobId -> (string)

The job ID of the Batch job that’s associated with this dependency.

type -> (string)

The type of the job dependency.

Shorthand Syntax:

jobId=string,type=string ...

JSON Syntax:

[
  {
    "jobId": "string",
    "type": "N_TO_N"|"SEQUENTIAL"
  }
  ...
]

--job-definition (string)

The job definition used by this job. This value can be one of name , name:revision , or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the job definition. If name is specified without a revision then the latest active revision is used.

--parameters (map)

Additional parameters passed to the job that replace parameter substitution placeholders that are set in the job definition. Parameters are specified as a key and value pair mapping. Parameters in a SubmitJob request override any corresponding parameter defaults from the job definition.

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

Shorthand Syntax:

KeyName1=string,KeyName2=string

JSON Syntax:

{"string": "string"
  ...}

--container-overrides (structure)

An object with various properties that override the defaults for the job definition that specify the name of a container in the specified job definition and the overrides it should receive. You can override the default command for a container, which is specified in the job definition or the Docker image, with a command override. You can also override existing environment variables on a container or add new environment variables to it with an environment override.

vcpus -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated, use resourceRequirements to override the vcpus parameter that’s set in the job definition. It’s not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2 resources, it overrides the vcpus parameter set in the job definition, but doesn’t override any vCPU requirement specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition. To override vCPU requirements that are specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition, resourceRequirements must be specified in the SubmitJob request, with type set to VCPU and value set to the new value. For more information, see Can’t override job definition resource requirements in the Batch User Guide .

memory -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated, use resourceRequirements to override the memory requirements specified in the job definition. It’s not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2 resources, it overrides the memory parameter set in the job definition, but doesn’t override any memory requirement that’s specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition. To override memory requirements that are specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition, resourceRequirements must be specified in the SubmitJob request, with type set to MEMORY and value set to the new value. For more information, see Can’t override job definition resource requirements in the Batch User Guide .

command -> (list)

The command to send to the container that overrides the default command from the Docker image or the job definition.

(string)

instanceType -> (string)

The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to single-node container jobs or jobs that run on Fargate resources, and shouldn’t be provided.

environment -> (list)

The environment variables to send to the container. You can add new environment variables, which are added to the container at launch, or you can override the existing environment variables from the Docker image or the job definition.

Note

Environment variables cannot start with “AWS_BATCH “. This naming convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.

(structure)

A key-value pair object.

name -> (string)

The name of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.

value -> (string)

The value of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.

resourceRequirements -> (list)

The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. This overrides the settings in the job definition. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

(structure)

The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

value -> (string)

The quantity of the specified resource to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the type specified.

type=”GPU”

The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. Make sure that the number of GPUs reserved for all containers in a job doesn’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched on.

Note

GPUs aren’t available for jobs that are running on Fargate resources.

type=”MEMORY”

The memory hard limit (in MiB) present to the container. This parameter is supported for jobs that are running on EC2 resources. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places for multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. It must be specified for each node at least once. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run .

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory management in the Batch User Guide .

For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then value is the hard limit (in MiB), and must match one of the supported values and the VCPU values must be one of the values supported for that memory value.

value = 512

VCPU = 0.25

value = 1024

VCPU = 0.25 or 0.5

value = 2048

VCPU = 0.25, 0.5, or 1

value = 3072

VCPU = 0.5, or 1

value = 4096

VCPU = 0.5, 1, or 2

value = 5120, 6144, or 7168

VCPU = 1 or 2

value = 8192

VCPU = 1, 2, 4, or 8

value = 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, or 15360

VCPU = 2 or 4

value = 16384

VCPU = 2, 4, or 8

value = 17408, 18432, 19456, 21504, 22528, 23552, 25600, 26624, 27648, 29696, or 30720

VCPU = 4

value = 20480, 24576, or 28672

VCPU = 4 or 8

value = 36864, 45056, 53248, or 61440

VCPU = 8

value = 32768, 40960, 49152, or 57344

VCPU = 8 or 16

value = 65536, 73728, 81920, 90112, 98304, 106496, 114688, or 122880

VCPU = 16

type=”VCPU”

The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2 resources, you must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

The default for the Fargate On-Demand vCPU resource count quota is 6 vCPUs. For more information about Fargate quotas, see Fargate quotas in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .

For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then value must match one of the supported values and the MEMORY values must be one of the values supported for that VCPU value. The supported values are 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16

value = 0.25

MEMORY = 512, 1024, or 2048

value = 0.5

MEMORY = 1024, 2048, 3072, or 4096

value = 1

MEMORY = 2048, 3072, 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, or 8192

value = 2

MEMORY = 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

value = 4

MEMORY = 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, 16384, 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

value = 8

MEMORY = 16384, 20480, 24576, 28672, 32768, 36864, 40960, 45056, 49152, 53248, 57344, or 61440

value = 16

MEMORY = 32768, 40960, 49152, 57344, 65536, 73728, 81920, 90112, 98304, 106496, 114688, or 122880

type -> (string)

The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

Shorthand Syntax:

vcpus=integer,memory=integer,command=string,string,instanceType=string,environment=[{name=string,value=string},{name=string,value=string}],resourceRequirements=[{value=string,type=string},{value=string,type=string}]

JSON Syntax:

{
  "vcpus": integer,
  "memory": integer,
  "command": ["string", ...],
  "instanceType": "string",
  "environment": [
    {
      "name": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
    ...
  ],
  "resourceRequirements": [
    {
      "value": "string",
      "type": "GPU"|"VCPU"|"MEMORY"
    }
    ...
  ]
}

--node-overrides (structure)

A list of node overrides in JSON format that specify the node range to target and the container overrides for that node range.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to jobs that are running on Fargate resources; use containerOverrides instead.

numNodes -> (integer)

The number of nodes to use with a multi-node parallel job. This value overrides the number of nodes that are specified in the job definition. To use this override, you must meet the following conditions:

  • There must be at least one node range in your job definition that has an open upper boundary, such as : or n: .

  • The lower boundary of the node range that’s specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of nodes specified in the override.

  • The main node index that’s specified in the job definition must be fewer than the number of nodes specified in the override.

nodePropertyOverrides -> (list)

The node property overrides for the job.

(structure)

The object that represents any node overrides to a job definition that’s used in a SubmitJob API operation.

targetNodes -> (string)

The range of nodes, using node index values, that’s used to override. A range of 0:3 indicates nodes with index values of 0 through 3 . If the starting range value is omitted (:n ), then 0 is used to start the range. If the ending range value is omitted (n: ), then the highest possible node index is used to end the range.

containerOverrides -> (structure)

The overrides that are sent to a node range.

vcpus -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated, use resourceRequirements to override the vcpus parameter that’s set in the job definition. It’s not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2 resources, it overrides the vcpus parameter set in the job definition, but doesn’t override any vCPU requirement specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition. To override vCPU requirements that are specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition, resourceRequirements must be specified in the SubmitJob request, with type set to VCPU and value set to the new value. For more information, see Can’t override job definition resource requirements in the Batch User Guide .

memory -> (integer)

This parameter is deprecated, use resourceRequirements to override the memory requirements specified in the job definition. It’s not supported for jobs running on Fargate resources. For jobs that run on EC2 resources, it overrides the memory parameter set in the job definition, but doesn’t override any memory requirement that’s specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition. To override memory requirements that are specified in the resourceRequirements structure in the job definition, resourceRequirements must be specified in the SubmitJob request, with type set to MEMORY and value set to the new value. For more information, see Can’t override job definition resource requirements in the Batch User Guide .

command -> (list)

The command to send to the container that overrides the default command from the Docker image or the job definition.

(string)

instanceType -> (string)

The instance type to use for a multi-node parallel job.

Note

This parameter isn’t applicable to single-node container jobs or jobs that run on Fargate resources, and shouldn’t be provided.

environment -> (list)

The environment variables to send to the container. You can add new environment variables, which are added to the container at launch, or you can override the existing environment variables from the Docker image or the job definition.

Note

Environment variables cannot start with “AWS_BATCH “. This naming convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.

(structure)

A key-value pair object.

name -> (string)

The name of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the name of the environment variable.

value -> (string)

The value of the key-value pair. For environment variables, this is the value of the environment variable.

resourceRequirements -> (list)

The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. This overrides the settings in the job definition. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

(structure)

The type and amount of a resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

value -> (string)

The quantity of the specified resource to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the type specified.

type=”GPU”

The number of physical GPUs to reserve for the container. Make sure that the number of GPUs reserved for all containers in a job doesn’t exceed the number of available GPUs on the compute resource that the job is launched on.

Note

GPUs aren’t available for jobs that are running on Fargate resources.

type=”MEMORY”

The memory hard limit (in MiB) present to the container. This parameter is supported for jobs that are running on EC2 resources. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run . You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. This is required but can be specified in several places for multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs. It must be specified for each node at least once. This parameter maps to Memory in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --memory option to docker run .

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory management in the Batch User Guide .

For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then value is the hard limit (in MiB), and must match one of the supported values and the VCPU values must be one of the values supported for that memory value.

value = 512

VCPU = 0.25

value = 1024

VCPU = 0.25 or 0.5

value = 2048

VCPU = 0.25, 0.5, or 1

value = 3072

VCPU = 0.5, or 1

value = 4096

VCPU = 0.5, 1, or 2

value = 5120, 6144, or 7168

VCPU = 1 or 2

value = 8192

VCPU = 1, 2, 4, or 8

value = 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, or 15360

VCPU = 2 or 4

value = 16384

VCPU = 2, 4, or 8

value = 17408, 18432, 19456, 21504, 22528, 23552, 25600, 26624, 27648, 29696, or 30720

VCPU = 4

value = 20480, 24576, or 28672

VCPU = 4 or 8

value = 36864, 45056, 53248, or 61440

VCPU = 8

value = 32768, 40960, 49152, or 57344

VCPU = 8 or 16

value = 65536, 73728, 81920, 90112, 98304, 106496, 114688, or 122880

VCPU = 16

type=”VCPU”

The number of vCPUs reserved for the container. This parameter maps to CpuShares in the Create a container section of the Docker Remote API and the --cpu-shares option to docker run . Each vCPU is equivalent to 1,024 CPU shares. For EC2 resources, you must specify at least one vCPU. This is required but can be specified in several places; it must be specified for each node at least once.

The default for the Fargate On-Demand vCPU resource count quota is 6 vCPUs. For more information about Fargate quotas, see Fargate quotas in the Amazon Web Services General Reference .

For jobs that are running on Fargate resources, then value must match one of the supported values and the MEMORY values must be one of the values supported for that VCPU value. The supported values are 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16

value = 0.25

MEMORY = 512, 1024, or 2048

value = 0.5

MEMORY = 1024, 2048, 3072, or 4096

value = 1

MEMORY = 2048, 3072, 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, or 8192

value = 2

MEMORY = 4096, 5120, 6144, 7168, 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, or 16384

value = 4

MEMORY = 8192, 9216, 10240, 11264, 12288, 13312, 14336, 15360, 16384, 17408, 18432, 19456, 20480, 21504, 22528, 23552, 24576, 25600, 26624, 27648, 28672, 29696, or 30720

value = 8

MEMORY = 16384, 20480, 24576, 28672, 32768, 36864, 40960, 45056, 49152, 53248, 57344, or 61440

value = 16

MEMORY = 32768, 40960, 49152, 57344, 65536, 73728, 81920, 90112, 98304, 106496, 114688, or 122880

type -> (string)

The type of resource to assign to a container. The supported resources include GPU , MEMORY , and VCPU .

JSON Syntax:

{
  "numNodes": integer,
  "nodePropertyOverrides": [
    {
      "targetNodes": "string",
      "containerOverrides": {
        "vcpus": integer,
        "memory": integer,
        "command": ["string", ...],
        "instanceType": "string",
        "environment": [
          {
            "name": "string",
            "value": "string"
          }
          ...
        ],
        "resourceRequirements": [
          {
            "value": "string",
            "type": "GPU"|"VCPU"|"MEMORY"
          }
          ...
        ]
      }
    }
    ...
  ]
}

--retry-strategy (structure)

The retry strategy to use for failed jobs from this SubmitJob operation. When a retry strategy is specified here, it overrides the retry strategy defined in the job definition.

attempts -> (integer)

The number of times to move a job to the RUNNABLE status. You can specify between 1 and 10 attempts. If the value of attempts is greater than one, the job is retried on failure the same number of attempts as the value.

evaluateOnExit -> (list)

Array of up to 5 objects that specify the conditions where jobs are retried or failed. If this parameter is specified, then the attempts parameter must also be specified. If none of the listed conditions match, then the job is retried.

(structure)

Specifies an array of up to 5 conditions to be met, and an action to take (RETRY or EXIT ) if all conditions are met. If none of the EvaluateOnExit conditions in a RetryStrategy match, then the job is retried.

onStatusReason -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the StatusReason returned for a job. The pattern can contain up to 512 characters. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white spaces (including spaces or tabs). It can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

onReason -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the Reason returned for a job. The pattern can contain up to 512 characters. It can contain letters, numbers, periods (.), colons (:), and white space (including spaces and tabs). It can optionally end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

onExitCode -> (string)

Contains a glob pattern to match against the decimal representation of the ExitCode returned for a job. The pattern can be up to 512 characters long. It can contain only numbers, and can end with an asterisk (*) so that only the start of the string needs to be an exact match.

The string can contain up to 512 characters.

action -> (string)

Specifies the action to take if all of the specified conditions (onStatusReason , onReason , and onExitCode ) are met. The values aren’t case sensitive.

Shorthand Syntax:

attempts=integer,evaluateOnExit=[{onStatusReason=string,onReason=string,onExitCode=string,action=string},{onStatusReason=string,onReason=string,onExitCode=string,action=string}]

JSON Syntax:

{
  "attempts": integer,
  "evaluateOnExit": [
    {
      "onStatusReason": "string",
      "onReason": "string",
      "onExitCode": "string",
      "action": "RETRY"|"EXIT"
    }
    ...
  ]
}

--propagate-tags | --no-propagate-tags (boolean)

Specifies whether to propagate the tags from the job or job definition to the corresponding Amazon ECS task. If no value is specified, the tags aren’t propagated. Tags can only be propagated to the tasks during task creation. For tags with the same name, job tags are given priority over job definitions tags. If the total number of combined tags from the job and job definition is over 50, the job is moved to the FAILED state. When specified, this overrides the tag propagation setting in the job definition.

--timeout (structure)

The timeout configuration for this SubmitJob operation. You can specify a timeout duration after which Batch terminates your jobs if they haven’t finished. If a job is terminated due to a timeout, it isn’t retried. The minimum value for the timeout is 60 seconds. This configuration overrides any timeout configuration specified in the job definition. For array jobs, child jobs have the same timeout configuration as the parent job. For more information, see Job Timeouts in the Amazon Elastic Container Service Developer Guide .

attemptDurationSeconds -> (integer)

The job timeout time (in seconds) that’s measured from the job attempt’s startedAt timestamp. After this time passes, Batch terminates your jobs if they aren’t finished. The minimum value for the timeout is 60 seconds.

For array jobs, the timeout applies to the child jobs, not to the parent array job.

For multi-node parallel (MNP) jobs, the timeout applies to the whole job, not to the individual nodes.

Shorthand Syntax:

attemptDurationSeconds=integer

JSON Syntax:

{
  "attemptDurationSeconds": integer
}

--tags (map)

The tags that you apply to the job request to help you categorize and organize your resources. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. For more information, see Tagging Amazon Web Services Resources in Amazon Web Services General Reference .

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

Shorthand Syntax:

KeyName1=string,KeyName2=string

JSON Syntax:

{"string": "string"
  ...}

--eks-properties-override (structure)

An object that can only be specified for jobs that are run on Amazon EKS resources with various properties that override defaults for the job definition.

podProperties -> (structure)

The overrides for the Kubernetes pod resources of a job.

containers -> (list)

The overrides for the container that’s used on the Amazon EKS pod.

(structure)

Object representing any Kubernetes overrides to a job definition that’s used in a SubmitJob API operation.

image -> (string)

The override of the Docker image that’s used to start the container.

command -> (list)

The command to send to the container that overrides the default command from the Docker image or the job definition.

(string)

args -> (list)

The arguments to the entrypoint to send to the container that overrides the default arguments from the Docker image or the job definition. For more information, see CMD in the Dockerfile reference and Define a command an arguments for a pod in the Kubernetes documentation .

(string)

env -> (list)

The environment variables to send to the container. You can add new environment variables, which are added to the container at launch. Or, you can override the existing environment variables from the Docker image or the job definition.

Note

Environment variables cannot start with “AWS_BATCH “. This naming convention is reserved for variables that Batch sets.

(structure)

An environment variable.

name -> (string)

The name of the environment variable.

value -> (string)

The value of the environment variable.

resources -> (structure)

The type and amount of resources to assign to a container. These override the settings in the job definition. The supported resources include memory , cpu , and nvidia.com/gpu . For more information, see Resource management for pods and containers in the Kubernetes documentation .

limits -> (map)

The type and quantity of the resources to reserve for the container. The values vary based on the name that’s specified. Resources can be requested using either the limits or the requests objects.

memory

The memory hard limit (in MiB) for the container, using whole integers, with a “Mi” suffix. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. memory can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If memory is specified in both places, then the value that’s specified in limits must be equal to the value that’s specified in requests .

Note

To maximize your resource utilization, provide your jobs with as much memory as possible for the specific instance type that you are using. To learn how, see Memory management in the Batch User Guide .

cpu

The number of CPUs that’s reserved for the container. Values must be an even multiple of 0.25 . cpu can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If cpu is specified in both places, then the value that’s specified in limits must be at least as large as the value that’s specified in requests .

nvidia.com/gpu

The number of GPUs that’s reserved for the container. Values must be a whole integer. memory can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If memory is specified in both places, then the value that’s specified in limits must be equal to the value that’s specified in requests .

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

requests -> (map)

The type and quantity of the resources to request for the container. The values vary based on the name that’s specified. Resources can be requested by using either the limits or the requests objects.

memory

The memory hard limit (in MiB) for the container, using whole integers, with a “Mi” suffix. If your container attempts to exceed the memory specified, the container is terminated. You must specify at least 4 MiB of memory for a job. memory can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If memory is specified in both, then the value that’s specified in limits must be equal to the value that’s specified in requests .

Note

If you’re trying to maximize your resource utilization by providing your jobs as much memory as possible for a particular instance type, see Memory management in the Batch User Guide .

cpu

The number of CPUs that are reserved for the container. Values must be an even multiple of 0.25 . cpu can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If cpu is specified in both, then the value that’s specified in limits must be at least as large as the value that’s specified in requests .

nvidia.com/gpu

The number of GPUs that are reserved for the container. Values must be a whole integer. nvidia.com/gpu can be specified in limits , requests , or both. If nvidia.com/gpu is specified in both, then the value that’s specified in limits must be equal to the value that’s specified in requests .

key -> (string)

value -> (string)

JSON Syntax:

{
  "podProperties": {
    "containers": [
      {
        "image": "string",
        "command": ["string", ...],
        "args": ["string", ...],
        "env": [
          {
            "name": "string",
            "value": "string"
          }
          ...
        ],
        "resources": {
          "limits": {"string": "string"
            ...},
          "requests": {"string": "string"
            ...}
        }
      }
      ...
    ]
  }
}

--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml (string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml.

--generate-cli-skeleton (string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json. Similarly, if provided yaml-input it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml. If provided with the value output, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.

Global Options

--debug (boolean)

Turn on debug logging.

--endpoint-url (string)

Override command’s default URL with the given URL.

--no-verify-ssl (boolean)

By default, the AWS CLI uses SSL when communicating with AWS services. For each SSL connection, the AWS CLI will verify SSL certificates. This option overrides the default behavior of verifying SSL certificates.

--no-paginate (boolean)

Disable automatic pagination.

--output (string)

The formatting style for command output.

  • json

  • text

  • table

  • yaml

  • yaml-stream

--query (string)

A JMESPath query to use in filtering the response data.

--profile (string)

Use a specific profile from your credential file.

--region (string)

The region to use. Overrides config/env settings.

--version (string)

Display the version of this tool.

--color (string)

Turn on/off color output.

  • on

  • off

  • auto

--no-sign-request (boolean)

Do not sign requests. Credentials will not be loaded if this argument is provided.

--ca-bundle (string)

The CA certificate bundle to use when verifying SSL certificates. Overrides config/env settings.

--cli-read-timeout (int)

The maximum socket read time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket read will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.

--cli-connect-timeout (int)

The maximum socket connect time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket connect will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.

--cli-binary-format (string)

The formatting style to be used for binary blobs. The default format is base64. The base64 format expects binary blobs to be provided as a base64 encoded string. The raw-in-base64-out format preserves compatibility with AWS CLI V1 behavior and binary values must be passed literally. When providing contents from a file that map to a binary blob fileb:// will always be treated as binary and use the file contents directly regardless of the cli-binary-format setting. When using file:// the file contents will need to properly formatted for the configured cli-binary-format.

  • base64

  • raw-in-base64-out

--no-cli-pager (boolean)

Disable cli pager for output.

--cli-auto-prompt (boolean)

Automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.

--no-cli-auto-prompt (boolean)

Disable automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.

Examples

Note

To use the following examples, you must have the AWS CLI installed and configured. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.

Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide .

To submit a job

This example submits a simple container job called example to the HighPriority job queue.

Command:

aws batch submit-job --job-name example --job-queue HighPriority  --job-definition sleep60

Output:

{
    "jobName": "example",
    "jobId": "876da822-4198-45f2-a252-6cea32512ea8"
}

Output

jobArn -> (string)

The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the job.

jobName -> (string)

The name of the job.

jobId -> (string)

The unique identifier for the job.